4th International Conference on Learning Representations (ICLR 2016)

Update (10/26/2015): Submissions and the review process, with a single round of reviewing, will again this year be supported by CMT rather than OpenReview.net. We hope to use OpenReview.net in the near future.

Overview

It is well understood that the performance of machine learning methods is heavily dependent on the choice of data representation (or features) on which they are applied. The rapidly developing field of representation learning is concerned with questions surrounding how we can best learn meaningful and useful representations of data. We take a broad view of the field, and include in it topics such as deep learning and feature learning, metric learning, kernel learning, compositional models, non-linear structured prediction, and issues regarding non-convex optimization.

Despite the importance of representation learning to machine learning and to application areas such as vision, speech, audio and NLP, there was no venue for researchers who share a common interest in this topic. The goal of ICLR has been to help fill this void.

A non-exhaustive list of relevant topics:

unsupervised, semisupervised, and supervised representation learning

metric learning and kernel learning

dimensionality expansion

sparse modeling

hierarchical models

optimization for representation learning

learning representations of outputs or states

implementation issues, parallelization, software platforms, hardware

applications in vision, audio, speech, natural language processing, robotics, neuroscience, or any other field

The program will include keynote presentations from invited speakers, oral presentations, and posters.

ICLR's Two Tracks

As usual, ICLR will feature two tracks: a Conference Track and a Workshop Track. However, this year, conference and workshop submissions will be reviewed separately, in two different periods. This call for paper is thus only for conference contributions. Workshop submissions will be received a few months before the conference and be subject to a lighter review. A future call for papers will be sent with more details on the Workshop Track.

Note that some of the submitted conference track papers that are not accepted to the conference proceedings will be invited to be presented under the Workshop Track.

ICLR Submission Instructions

By November 12th (2:00pm Pacific Standard Time) authors are asked to submit through CMT the title, abstract, author list, subject areas and a draft of their paper.

Then, as soon as possible, authors must post on arXiv their submission: http://arxiv.org .

Finally, by November 19th (2:00pm Pacific Standard Time), authors must update their submission in CMT with the arXiv ID of their finalized paper. They must also update their PDF submission within CMT.

Note that there can be up to 3 days of delay between sending a manuscript on arXiv and receiving your arXiv ID. It is thus important to post your submission on arXiv early. Note also that you can always update your submission on arXiv later on. Submissions without an arXiv ID after November 19th will be automatically removed from CMT.

For more information on paper preparation, including the mandatory style files, please see http://www.iclr.cc/

Notes

Regarding the conference submission's 6-9 page limits, these are really meant as guidelines and will not be strictly enforced. For example, figures should not be shrunk to illegible size to fit within the page limit. However, in order to ensure a reasonable workload for our reviewers, papers that go beyond the 9 pages should be formatted to include a 9 page submission, with supplementary material appended at the end of the manuscript and clearly marked as an appendix, which will be optionally reviewed.

Paper revisions will be permitted, and in fact are encouraged, in response to comments from and discussions with the reviewers (see An Open Reviewing Paradigm below).

An Open Reviewing Paradigm

Submissions to ICLR are posted on arXiv prior to being submitted to the conference.

After the authors have submitted their papers via CMT, the ICLR program committee designates anonymous reviewers as usual.

The submitted reviews are published without the name of the reviewer, but with an indication that they are the designated reviews.

Anyone can openly (non-anonymously) write and publish comments on the paper. Anyone can ask the program chairs for permission to become an anonymous designated reviewer (open bidding). The program chairs have ultimate control over the publication of each anonymous review. Open commenters will have to use their real names.

Authors can post comments in response to reviews and comments. They can revise the paper as many times as they want, possibly citing some of the reviews. Reviewers are expected to revise their reviews in light of paper revisions.

The review calendar includes a generous amount of time for discussion between the authors, anonymous reviewers, and open commentators. The goal is to improve the quality of the final submissions.

The ICLR program and area chairs will consider all submitted papers, comments, and reviews and will decide which papers are to be presented in the conference track, which will be invited to be presented in the workshop track, and which will not appear at ICLR.

Papers that are presented in the workshop track or are not accepted will be considered non-archival, and may be submitted elsewhere (modified or not), although the ICLR site will maintain the reviews, the comments, and the links to the arXiv versions.

General Chairs

Yoshua Bengio, Université de Montreal
Yann LeCun, New York University and Facebook